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459 results for "cultural adaptation" — page 6 of 23
ZF_2_01 — Deep-Sea Ecosystems: Hydrothermal Vents and Abyssal Biology
The deep ocean — defined as waters below 200 m, encompassing 95% of the ocean's volume and Earth's largest biome — remained virtually unexplored until the mid-20th century. The 1977 discovery of hydrothermal vent ecosyst
ZF_2_12 — Deep-Sea Gigantism and Abyssal Ecology
Deep-sea gigantism (also called abyssal gigantism) is the observed tendency for certain deep-sea invertebrates and some vertebrates to attain body sizes far exceeding those of their shallow-water relatives — a pattern do
ZF_2_04 — Bioluminescence and Deep-Sea Phenomena
In the deep ocean — where sunlight vanishes below ~1,000 m — bioluminescence is the dominant source of light and the most widespread form of communication on Earth. An estimated 76% of all ocean organisms produce or disp
ZF_3_13 — Sacred Seas — Ocean Mythology and Maritime Ritual Worldwide
Every major maritime culture has developed elaborate mythological frameworks for understanding and relating to the sea — systems of divine governance, ritual propitiation, and cosmological meaning that reflect genuine ec
ZF_3_02 — Maritime Archaeology: Shipwrecks, Sunken Cities, and Submerged Structures
Maritime archaeology — the study of human interaction with the sea through material remains — has matured from treasure-hunting salvage into a rigorous scientific discipline that applies the same stratigraphic principles
E_3_01 — Rise and Fall of Civilizations
Every complex civilization in recorded history has collapsed or been transformed beyond recognition. The Bronze Age collapse (~1177 BCE) destroyed the interconnected civilizations of the eastern Mediterranean within a si
E_2_08 — Little Ice Age — Climate, Society, and the Modern World
The Little Ice Age (LIA) was a prolonged period of climatic cooling that affected much of the Northern Hemisphere from approximately 1300 to 1850 CE, with coldest intervals during the Maunder Minimum (1645–1715) and the
E_2_19 — Volcanism and Human Evolution: Eruptions That Shaped Our Species
The relationship between volcanism and human evolution operates on multiple scales and through multiple mechanisms — from the geological forces that created the landscapes where hominins evolved, to the catastrophic erup
ZG_5_16 — Machine Translation and Semantic Loss: What Gets Lost Between Languages
Machine translation (MT) — the use of computational systems to translate text or speech from one language to another — has undergone revolutionary transformation since the 2010s through the advent of neural machine trans
ZG_4_05 — Translation Theory and the Limits of Meaning
Translation — the rendering of meaning from one language into another — is one of humanity's oldest and most consequential intellectual practices, shaping the flow of knowledge, literature, religion, and ideas across civ
ZG_4_12 — Second Language Acquisition: Interlanguage, Critical Period, and SLA
Second Language Acquisition (SLA) — the study of how people learn languages beyond their first (L1) — is a multidisciplinary field drawing on linguistics, psychology, cognitive science, and education. Central questions i
ZG_4_18 — Whistled Languages: Long-Distance Communication Through Tonal Transposition
Whistled languages — systems in which speakers transpose the phonological content of a spoken language into whistled melodies, preserving sufficient linguistic structure to carry complex messages over distances of 2–8 km
ZG_3_20 — Pirahã & Universal Grammar Debate
The Pirahã people — a small indigenous group of approximately 400–800 individuals living along the Maici River in the Brazilian Amazon — and their language have become the center of one of the most consequential debates
TH_04 — The Suppression Convergence Pattern
INTERDOC_59 — Intergenerational Trauma: A Three-Channel Synthesis (Epigenetic, Psychological, Cultural)
Trauma is empirically heritable — but not through any single mechanism. The dominant public framing (epigenetics-as-Lamarckism) is overconfident; the dominant academic counter-framing (it's all attachment / it's all cult
INTERDOC_35 — Entity Taxonomy: Cross-Cultural Synthesis
[KEY FINDING] When entity reports from ALL sources are catalogued — ancient religious texts, shamanic traditions, modern UFO contact, sleep paralysis, psychedelic experiences, near-death experiences, and meditative state
INTERDOC_24 — Library Destruction and the Erasure of Knowledge
[KEY FINDING] The Library of Alexandria — founded by Ptolemy I Soter (~295 BCE), estimated to have held 400,000–700,000 scrolls — suffered multiple destruction events: Julius Caesar's fire (48 BCE, which may have burned
INTERDOC_49 — Buddhist Institutional Suppression: A Comprehensive Timeline of Knowledge Control By and Against Buddhist Traditions
Buddhist suppression spans 2,200 years across three continents and at least six distinct persecutor categories: (1) Zoroastrian/Sasanian — the priest Kartir (3rd century CE) suppressed Buddhism, Manichaeism, and Christia
INTERDOC_28 — The Death-Rebirth Universal Pattern
The death-rebirth motif appears in every known mythological system: Osiris (Egyptian — murdered by Set, dismembered, reassembled by Isis, resurrected as lord of the afterlife, ~2400 BCE in Pyramid Texts), Inanna/Ishtar (
INTERDOC_12 — The Denisovan Ghost Population Puzzle
In 2010, Svante Pääbo's team at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology sequenced DNA from a tiny finger bone fragment found in Denisova Cave, Altai Mountains, Siberia, and discovered an entirely new homin
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